“Bulls do not return to fields. Crops are saved. Team leaves to find another farmer in need of help,” the end title reads.

While Parsons fancies himself a hero, the fact is there are many more humane, gun-free ways to keep elephants away from crops.

Conservationists and farmers have been working together to create harmless elephant-shooing devices, such as chili-infused string fences, beehives on poles, and people standing guard to bang bamboo sticks, ring cowbells and shine spotlights on the elephants when they approach the crops at night.

If Parsons truly wants to be a hero, he should donate the thousands of dollars he spent to kill that elephant on his vacation to organizations that are working on humane ways to resolve the problem all year round.

In your March 14, 2011 video blog “Hunting Problem Elephant – My 2011 Vacation,” you shoot and kill an elephant, and state that killing problem elephants is “one of the most beneficial and rewarding” things you do.

While you may believe you are helping farmers in Zimbabwe by killing the elephants that wander into their crops, there are actually many other humane ways to deal with this problem.

If you really want to be a hero, I urge you to help farmers year-round without harming a species that is listed as "vulnerable" in the process. Please donate the thousands of dollars you spent to kill that elephant on your vacation to organizations working on humane solutions that will protect crops and wildlife.

In addition, Go Daddy should offer free web hosting for a year to any animal protection organization that chooses to stay with your company after this offensive incident.